1-48 of 87 results

The Bay Tree,Laurus Nobilis, is an evergreen species commonly found in Mediterranean countries. Bay Tree (Sweet Laurel) -. Laurus Nobilis. Its leaves are well known for adding to many dishes in the kitchen.

The leaves are small, 2–4 cm long, and oval with a rounded apex. The flowers are small, with five pale yellow-green petals; flowering is in April. This surrounds the very hard nut, which contains one (occasionally two or three) small, oil-rich seeds.

This is the largest of the date palms, only truly rivalled in size by the true date palm, but this species is more massive, even where the two are the same height. The diameter of the trunk sets this palm apart when they are seen together, as well as the different shape to the leaves.

Mountain ash is the tallest hardwood tree in the world with specimens reaching 80 metres or more in height. Only the softwood Californian redwoods (Sequoia sempervirens) are taller. The species is native to wet sclerophyll forests (tall open forests) in the Otway Ranges in southern Victoria, the Gippsland Forests in eastern Victoria and north-eastern and southern Tasmania.

The Weeping Tea Tree is a native of New South Wales and Queensland. An evergreen tree with a weeping habit strongly resembling the weeping willow. It grows to 4 metres with a spread of 2 metres and has white flowers from Spring to early Summer.

I. aquifolium is the species familiar in Christmas decoration, and is regarded as the type species of the genus Ilex, which by association is also called "holly". It is a evergreen tree or shrub found, for example, in shady areas of forests of oak and in beech hedges.

It belongs to the family of Illiciaceae, dicotyledonous angiosperm species. It is a tropical evergreen tree, tall between 5-10 m. Star anise has large glossy green foliage, its white flowers are beautiful and of great decorative value.

TheCarob Tree can grow up to 55 feet tall. Most Carob Trees are dioecious (separate male and female plants), though some can be hermaphrodite (both sexes on the same plant). The trees blossom in autumn (September–October).

20 Indian Kudzu Seeds. Soak seeds in water for 24 hours. (Pueraria tuberosa). INDIAN KUDZU. Indian Kudzu is fast growing and takes. Pueraria tuberosa. Seeds should germinate after 3-4 weeks. HOW TO GROW.

The Zigzag Wattle is so named because its stems change direction each time a leaf is grown. An evergreen tree growing to 4 metres with a spread of 2 metres, the branchlets are pendulous and give the plant an attractive weeping habit.

Technically, it is Dematophyllum secundiflorum, according to sources like Kew Royal Botanic Gardens, Wikipedia, etc., but more likely known as Calia (or Sophora) secundiflora…. AND even MORE LIKELY known by a number of common names, most popularly Texas Mountain Laurel or Texas Mescal Bean.

It is a small tree to 10 metres (30ft) when growing in a rainforest habitat or a 1-2 metre shrub on exposed sites with poor soils. The leaves are alternate, thick, hairless, lanceolate, 8 - 12 cm long, with a blunt tip, and coarsely-toothed margins.

The Weeping Myall or Boree is a medium weeping tree of around 7 - 10 metres. It is frost and drought tolerant and prefers heavy soils. A native of Qld, NSW and Vic, it withstands severe hot, dry conditions and occasional flooding.

An large, evergreen tree growing to 45 metres (150 ft) with an erect, branching trunk with persistant, red-brown stringy-type bark. A well kmown Koala food tree, it grows on the eastern coastal plain from Jervis Bay in New South Wales into the tropics of North Quensland on deeper soils of medium to high fertility.

Paraserianthes lophantha, commonly known as Cape Leeuwin Wattle or Crested Wattle, is the only member of the family that occurs in south-west Western Australia. The other members of the family are tropical.

20 Black Wattle Seeds. (Acacia mearnsii). BLACK WATTLE. and leave them to soak. Seeds that have. have sunk have expanded, they are ready. Place the seeds intended to sow into. If the seeds float then discard them.

(Andographis paniculata). Best time of year to sow is during summer. Andrographis paniculata. Soak the seeds in cool water overnight. The Seed Vine. Seeds should germinate after 1-2 weeks. 100% GENUINE SEEDS.

A native of western Victoria that prefers light, well-drained soils in a sunny position. This evergreen mallee (mallees are usually multi-stemmed) is very hardy being drought, frost, fire and salt resistant.

Technically, it is Dematophyllum secundiflorum, according to sources like Kew Royal Botanic Gardens, Wikipedia, etc., but more likely known as Calia (or Sophora) secundiflora…. AND even MORE LIKELY known by a number of common names, most popularly Texas Mountain Laurel or Texas Mescal Bean.

The stem is erect with grey, scaly bark while the leaves are a dull grey-green, pinnate with two to six leaflets. The flowers are small, greenish white but profuse. The fruit are winged seeds similar to a maple.

The Grey Gum is native to South East Queensland and New South Wales. It prefers poor soils (like the Sydney sandstone soils) and the Eastern Tableands with a habitat that extends from South East Queensland down to Nowra on the south coast of NSW.

The Holm Oak is a native those countries bordering the western end of the Mediterranean Sea. A slow growing tree to 25 metres (80 ft), it is a very hansome tree, round headed, elegant with evergreen glossy green foliage.

The trunk is erect, straight and branching with a persistant, grey to red-brown stringy bark. Native to north-eastern New South Wales and the coastal plain of south-east Queensland, this tree prefers heavy clay soils in a sunny, open position.

A deciduous tree to 10 metres and a spread of 5 metres, the stem is erect, straight and stout; the leaves are entire to the midpoint when they are divided into two lobes; the flowers are white, with five club shaped petals and it flowers in its third year.

An evergreen tree, it can grow to 10 to 20 metres (35 to 60ft) with a spread of 5 metres. The stem is stout and erect with long ascending branches; the bark is pale, papery, thick and spongy. The leaves are ash-green coloured and 20 cm long.

This fig is known to exist in two forms, the form depending on where the seed germinates. If it germinates in a tree canopy it takes the form of a strangler fig once its roots reach the ground. As such a single trunk does not develop.